Mengxue Wu1, Rui Chen1, Jiahao Soh1, Yue Shen2, Lishi Jiao1, Jianfeng Wu3, Xudong Chen1, Rong Ji4, Minghui Hong1. 1. Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, National University of Singapore, 4 Engineering Drive 3, 117576, Singapore. 2. Department of Electronic Engineering, Tsinghua University, Beijing, 100084, China. 3. Department of Physics, National University of Singapore, 2 Sciecne Drive 3, 117542, Singapore. 4. Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR), 2 Fusionopolis way, 138634, Singapore.
Abstract
Engineered microsphere possesses the advantage of strong light manipulation at sub-wavelength scale and emerges as a promising candidate to shrink the focal spot size. Here we demonstrated a center-covered engineered microsphere which can adjust the transverse component of the incident beam and achieve a sharp photonic nanojet. Modification of the beam width and working distance of the photonic nanojet were achieved by tuning the cover ratio of the engineered microsphere, leading to a sharp spot size which exceeded the optical diffraction limit. At a wavelength of 633 nm, a focal spot of 245 nm (0.387 λ) was achieved experimentally under plane wave illumination. Strong localized field with Bessel-like distribution was demonstrated by employing the linearly polarized beam and a center-covered mask being engineered on the microsphere.
Engineered microsphere possesses the advantage of strong light manipulation at sub-wavelength scale and emerges as a promising candidate to shrink the focal spot size. Here we demonstrated a center-covered engineered microsphere which can adjust the transverse component of the incident beam and achieve a sharp photonic nanojet. Modification of the beam width and working distance of the photonic nanojet were achieved by tuning the cover ratio of the engineered microsphere, leading to a sharp spot size which exceeded the optical diffraction limit. At a wavelength of 633 nm, a focal spot of 245 nm (0.387 λ) was achieved experimentally under plane wave illumination. Strong localized field with Bessel-like distribution was demonstrated by employing the linearly polarized beam and a center-covered mask being engineered on the microsphere.
Micro-lenses, with a size of a few wavelengths, exhibit excellent abilities to confine
incident light and generate small focal spot which exceeds the optical diffraction limit
at around half of the incident wavelength. Among which, the most investigated
micro-lenses are microspheres and microcylinders. It has been demonstrated early in 2000
by Lu and Luk’aynchuk et al.1. Later, Chen et
al. studied the field enhancement at the shadow side of a microcylinder under
plane wave illumination and termed it as “photonic nanojet”2. Excellent optical properties of the photonic nanojet, such as
non-diffracting, strong localized field intensity and sharp focal spot, have proved to
be beneficial for various applications: nanoparticle detection, optical nanolithography,
and super-resolution imaging. Among which, a small beam waist of the focal spot is the
most desired property as it characterizes the converging ability of the microlens and
plays a key role in these applications. It is found that when a nanoparticle is located
within the focal region of a microsphere, the back-scattering intensity can be greatly
enhanced. This enhancement is applied for detecting nanoparticles in liquid and
nanoparticles at a size of 20 nm can be identified34.
Furthermore, it is concluded that the detection sensitivity can be greatly enhanced when
the beam width of the photonic nanojet is small. On the other hand, the photonic nanojet
generated by the microsphere is applied as the exposure beam in optical lithography5678910, where the minimum line width of the fabricated patterns
is directly dominated by the beam width of the photonic nanojet. Therefore, when a sharp
photonic nanojet is achieved, the pattern size can be reduced correspondingly. Also, in
optical super-resolution imaging, the sample interacts with the electric field of the
photonic nanojet, and generates scattered wave which propagates through the microsphere
to form the image. When combined with a confocal microscope, resolution of
25 nm in air can be achieved, pushing the super-resolution ability of
microspheres to a new limit1112.Approaches to modify the optical properties of the photonic nanojet, including changing
the refractive index and diameter of the microspheres, varying the illumination
conditions and the shapes of the microspheres, have been proposed13141516171819. Another effective way to tune the photonic
nanojet is fabricating micro-structure on the spherical surface and modify the
contribution of different field components to the total field20. This
approach introduces freedom in designing the surface structure of the microsphere and
manipulating the interaction of the microsphere with incident beam. Various functional
structures can be fabricated on the microsphere to achieve modification of the beam size
and working distance of the photonic nanojet. When linear or circular polarization was
illuminated on center-covered focusing lenses, Bessel beam can be generated2122. A Bessel-like photonic nanojet was reported by designing a
core-shell microsphere and illuminated under linearly polarized beam23.
Another work which simulated a flat PEC filter located above the microsphere proved the
modification ability of the engineered microsphere24. The difference in
our work is that we employed a blanket-like Platinum (Pt) cover on dielectric
microsphere surface and prevented the multiple reflection at the gap between the
microsphere top surface and metal boundary. As the total electric field intensity
pattern at the cross-section perpendicular to the polarization direction is determined
by the transverse field component, we can expect a sharper focal spot when the
transverse component is modulated to a smaller spot. The designed mask, which blocks the
beam propagating in the vicinity of the optical axis, is important to the formation of a
sharp focal spot.In this paper, a photonic nanojet with FWHM = 245 nm
(0.387 λ,
λ = 633 nm) is demonstrated in
both simulation and experiment by combining the properties of the linear polarization
illumination, center-covered mask, and the dielectric microsphere. Compared with
conventional ways of modifying the beam shape of the photonic nanojet, the highlights of
our work are as follows. Firstly, we achieve a sharp photonic nanojet using a linearly
polarized beam and center-covered mask created on the microsphere. Secondly, unlike
conventional large scale mask coated on an objective lens, the cover mask we employed is
designed and fabricated directly onto the microsphere surface. By decorating the
functional micro/nano-structures, the vector properties of the electric field of the
photonic nanojet of the microspheres can be modulated. Most importantly, the beam width
of the photonic nanojet breaks the optical diffraction limit. In this work, 3D
finite-difference time-domain (Lumerical FDTD) is used for the theoretical analysis and
the experimental verifications are carried out using a high resolution optical
microscope under the illumination of linear polarization beam.
Results and Discussion
Figure 1 schematically shows the focusing of an engineered
microsphere illuminated by a linearly polarized beam. The dielectric microsphere has
a diameter of 10 μm and refractive index of 1.5. The
incident beam is a plane wave with direction indicated by the arrow. The opaque
cover on the engineered microsphere surface functions as a filter which removes the
beams propagating near the optical axis. This layer is fabricated by depositing
Platinum (Pt) with a thickness of 1 μm onto the
surface of the microsphere. The electric field at the focal plane of the engineered
microsphere can be decomposed into longitudinal (E) and
transverse (E and E) field
components. In this paper, we study the x-axis polarized plane wave
incidence. Therefore, the intensity contribution of the E
field is ignored as it is of two magnitudes smaller in intensity compared to the
E field. It should be noted that due to the asymmetric
nature of the linear polarization beam, the intensity pattern of the
E field is two symmetric peaks along the
x-axis, which results in elongation along the polarization direction. In this
paper, we focus our discussion on the yz plane, which characterizes the
minimum spot size achievable by the design. Modification of the
E field leads to generation of different photonic
nanojets with tunable beam sizes and working distances. When the cover mask is
introduced at the center of the microsphere, the light rays propagating in the
vicinity of the optical axis is reflected and therefore only the beams which locate
farther from the axis are allowed to enter the microsphere and contribute in forming
the photonic nanojet. Based on Snell’s law of optical transmission and
reflection, incident beam propagating farther from the optical axis focuses near the
surface of the microsphere and vice versa. After focused by the microsphere, these
beams formed different angles with the optical axis and the intensity of the focal
spot is calculated as the integration from the smallest angle to the largest. The
contribution to the total field from the incident rays are different. Consider the
beam propagating near to the optical axis, after being focused by the microsphere,
the angle formed by the transmitted beam and the optical axis is small, which is
comparable to the result of a focusing lens with low numerical aperture(NA). At a
low NA, the focal spot possesses a long working distance with a large spot size. For
the beam propagating further from the optical axis, the focusing phenomenon is
similar to the case of a high NA lens. These incident beam converges through the
microsphere and focuses at a small working distance with a sharp beam waist. Based
on the different contributions of the incident beam to the photonic nanojet, a
center-covered mask is designed on the microsphere to allow only the beam
propagating farther from the optical axis to form the focal spot. In this way, a
sharp photonic nanojet with small working distance can be achieved. To investigate
the effect of the opaque cover on the microsphere, the cover ratio is defined as the
radius of the deposited Pt divided by the radius of the microsphere (in top
view).
Figure 1
Design of the center-covered engineered microsphere for super-focusing of
linear polarized beam.
The incident beam is 633 nm and diameter of the microsphere is
10 μm.
When the cover ratio changes, the amount of the incident beam entering the
microsphere is modified. To clarify the effect of different cover ratios, we define
the smallest NA introduced by the incident ray propagating through the microsphere
as NA. As the total field intensity is the integral of
the beam with different angles to the optical axis, the minimum NA determines the
lower boundary of the integral range. When the NA is
high, contribution from the parasitic beams, which are blocked by the mask, are
ignored in the formation of the total field. At large cover ratio, only a thin
annular shape beam is focused by the engineered microsphere and interfered along the
optical axis.To evaluate the performance of the engineered microsphere under the x-axis
linearly polarized focused beam, simulations are performed with 3D FDTD. Perfect
matching layers are selected as boundary conditions with non-uniform mesh size of
λ/10. Results are collected from the yz plane. The
FWHM and working distance (W.D.) values of the photonic nanojet are evaluated at the
highest intensity point along the optical axis outside the boundary of the
engineered microsphere. Simulation results for the linear polarization illumination
are shown in Fig. 2. The cover ratio of the engineered
microsphere is changed from 0 to 0.80. In Fig. 2a, the
dependance of FWHM on the cover ratio is presented. It can be observed that when the
cover ratio increases, the FWHM of the engineered microsphere decreases and achieves
a spot size beyond the theoretical diffraction limit of around
0.50 λ. Comparing the results, it can be observed
that a single microsphere without any decorated cover layer possesses a FWHM of
424.11 nm (0.67 λ) under
633 nm illumination wavelength. When the cover ratio increases from 0 to
0.20, corresponding to the mask cover radius of 0 and
1 μm, a modulation of the FWHM from
424.11 nm to 321.84 nm is realized. The difference in FWHM
is around 102.27 nm and 0.162 λ. At a
small cover ratio, the NA of the engineered microsphere
is low, resulting in a focal spot within the optical diffraction limit. When the
cover ratio changes from 0.30 to 0.50, the Pt layer spreads over a half of the
microsphere surface, the FWHM is shown to vary from 299.56 nm to
271.37 nm, which changes at 0.045 λ. It
can be concluded that the engineered microsphere at the cover ratio of 0.30 exhibits
the ability to focus the plane wave incident beam to below
0.50 λ. This indicates an effective modulation of
the photonic nanojet by the engineered microsphere. Further enlarging the cover
ratio from 0.60 to 0.80, only a thin ring shape of the incident light can enter the
microsphere. At this stage, the incident beam enters the microsphere at a longer
distance away from the origin of the optical axis. Thus, the
NA of the engineered microsphere is high. The
decrease of the FWHM value in this region is observed to be from
259.57 nm to 208.33 nm, where a sharp photonic nanojet and
high sidelobe are observed. The sharpest focal spot achieved is
0.33 λ, corresponding to the cover ratio of 0.80.
Compared the FWHM between 0 and 0.80 cover ratio, obvious change from
424.11 nm to 208.33 nm, indicating a strong modification of
the beam width of the photonic nanojet. Another important property to characterize
the photonic nanojet is the working distance, calculated as the distance between the
shadow side of the microsphere boundary and the highest intensity of the photonic
nanojet along optical axis. As shown in Fig. 2b, when the
cover ratio of the engineered microsphere increases, the W.D. decreases, indicating
that the photonic nanojet is close to the microsphere surface. When the cover ratio
is 0, the W.D. is calculated as 777.78 nm. Further increase the cover
ratio to 0.40, the W.D. dropped to 583.33 nm, which falls within a
wavelength of the incident beam. At a higher cover ratio, for example at 0.80, the
W.D. is 0 and the highest intensity of the photonic nanojet is located at the shadow
side of the engineered microsphere boundary. This indicates that the engineered
microsphere can modify both the beam size and the W.D. of the photonic nanojet. As
the cover ratio of the engineered microsphere increases, the intensity of the
photonic nanojet decreases. When the cover ratio is 0, the highest intensity is 315
times higher compared to the incident beam. The Pt cover limits the amount of
transmitting incident beam through the microsphere and leads to low intensity of the
photonic nanojet. At a cover ratio of 0.50, the intensity drops to 271 times of
magnification of incident beam and at high cover ratio of 0.80, the intensity
becomes 199 times.
Figure 2
Dependence of focal spot size and working distance of the photonic nanojet on
cover ratio.
(a) Simulated FWHM/λ value for different cover
ratios. (b) Simulated working distance for different cover
ratios.
To experimentally exam and verify the optical properties of the center-covered
engineered microspheres, the focusing characterization of the photonic nanojet is
performed with a home-built optical microscope imaging system, as shown in Fig. 3. The optical path of the whole setup is shown in Fig. 3a. The designed engineered microsphere characterized by
the scanning electron microscope (SEM) is shown in Fig. 3b,
where the microsphere at a diameter of around 10 μm
and covered with Pt layer is located within a thin gold membrane. It can be seen
that the gold membrane holds the waist of the microsphere and provides strong
support during the focus ion beam (FIB) fabrication and optical microscope
characterization. Artificial dark blue color is applied to indicate the location of
the Pt cover layer. During the experiment, a He-Ne 633 nm laser with
linear polarization is employed as the illumination source. After the beam passes
through the half wave plate, polarization direction is modulated. The photonic
nanojets generated at the shadow side of the microspheres are collected with an
150× objective lens (NA = 0.9) and recorded by a
high resolution CMOS camera. The detailed characterization process is described in
Methods section. Using this experimental setup, the photonic nanojet of the
engineered microsphere is observed and captured. Figure 4
presents the experimental results of the beam size and the cross-section of the
photonic nanojet compared to the previous simulation results. As shown in Fig. 4a, engineered microsphere with different cover ratios are
placed on the sample stage of the optical microscope in transmission mode. Incident
beam illuminates onto the engineered surface of the microsphere and photonic nanojet
formed at the shadow side is collected. The cross-section of the highest intensity
plane along the optical axis is captured and analyzed. Figure
4a shows the experimental results for measuring the FWHM value at each
cover ratio, with the simulated results as a comparison. The cover ratio of the
fabricated engineered microsphere is changed from 0 to 0.78, with a linear increase
of around 0.13 each step. When the cover ratio is 0, which indicates an original
microsphere with no artificial structures, a FWHM of 410 nm is measured
in the optical system, corresponding to a value of
0.647 λ. This value agrees well with the
simulation prediction. It can be observed that with the increase of cover ratio, the
beam size of the photonic nanojet decreases. When an engineered microsphere with
large cover ratio of 0.603 is applied in the experiment, the FWHM value is measured
as 289 nm, which reaches 0.456 λ. This
indicates that when the cover ratio exceeds 0.603, a super-focusing effect of the
engineered microsphere can be achieved in experiment. At a higher cover ratio of
0.777, the FWHM of the photonic nanojet can be reduced to 245 nm,
0.387 λ, and the intensity distribution is close
to a Bessel beam generated by a high NA optical system. To have a detailed
comparison of the focal spot intensity patterns of the engineered microspheres at
different cover ratios, the cross-section perpendicular to the optical axis is shown
in Fig. 4b. The size of all the square frames is
5 μm. Three important cover ratios are taken as
0, 0.603, and 0.777, which represent the original microsphere without surface
engineering, the cover ratio beyond which focal spot size is smaller than
0.5 λ and the largest cover ratio fabricated and
characterized with the optical system. As it can be seen from Fig.
4b, a microsphere can generate a focal spot with no sidelobe and with the
increasing of cover ratio, the sidelobe becomes higher and the intensity
distribution is similar to a Bessel beam. The focal spot size at the center of the
optical axis is reduced significantly. At high cover ratio, the annular shape
incident beam has a large NA and the interference at the
focal spot is similar to the generation of the Bessel beam. The difference in
simulation and experiment could be resulted from difficulty locating the
y-axis from the intensity patterns on CMOS camera (assume the incident beam
propagates along the z-axis and the polarization is along x-axis). At
a higher cover ratio, the different lengths of the electric fields along the
x and y directions become more obvious to be identified. It can be
concluded that for linear polarization illumination, the designed center-covered
microsphere can function as a focusing lens which generates a sharp focal spot under
plane wave illumination. When the cover ratio increases, this phenomenon becomes
more obvious as the low NA contribution to the total
field is filtered out. The W.D. of the photonic nanojet is close to the surface of
the microsphere. However, the boundary of the microsphere is hard to be identified
under the transmission mode of optical microscope. Therefore, the W.D. can not be
characterized with our current experimental setup.
Figure 3
Characterization of the center-covered microsphere focusing.
(a) Schematic of the experimental setup. Abbreviations for optical
components: HWP: half-wave plate. OBJ: objective lens. CMOS: Complementary
metal-oxide semiconductor. (b) Top and side views of a center-covered
microsphere located in a thin gold membrane. Artificial dark blue color to
indicate the location of the Pt cover layer.
Figure 4
Simulation and experimental results of the beam size for center-covered
engineered microspheres at different cover ratios.
(a) Dependence of the beam width of the photonic nanojet on cover
ratio. (b) Normalized intensity distribution of the cross-section of
the photonic nanojet along the optical axis captured by the CMOS camera. The
cover ratio is labelled under each figure and the length of the frames are
5 μm.
To have a detailed comparison of the cross-section intensity distribution of the
E field for different engineered microspheres, nine of
the them are presented in Fig. 5. In the SEM pictures, a clear
boundary between glass and Pt can be observed. The smooth edge of the deposited Pt
layer minimizes the scattering of the incident beam. A thin layer of gold membrane
is employed and functions as a holder to control the microsphere position during
experiment. By varying the cover ratio from 0 to 0.777, the intensity distribution
along the cross-section of the focal plane is presented, corresponding to each
engineered microsphere design. The cross-section in vicinity of the focal plane is
recorded and the intensity is normalized. In the figures, the label under each curve
indicates the cover ratio and the scale of x axis is
2 μm. It can be observed that when the cover
ratio of the Pt on the microspheres increases gradually, the beam waist of the
photonic nanojet is decreased. This clearly shows an effective modulation of the
beam width of the photonic nanojet. When the cover ratio is higher than 0.531, an
increasing sidelobe can be observed. Incident beam with high
NA interferes around the focal spot and
generates a Bessel-like distribution of the intensity.
Figure 5
Cross-section intensity near the focal spot of microspheres (diameter of
10 μm) with different cover ratios.
The top-view SEM pictures show the coverage of the Pt mask. Numbers labelled
under each intensity pattern indicate the cover ratio of the Pt mask. The
intensity is normalized and the length of the bottom frames is
2 μm.
Conclusions
In summary, we design and fabricate the center-covered engineered microspheres with
different cover ratios on the illumination surface. This cover layer forms a
center-blocked filter which selectively transmits the incident beam into the
microsphere. By varying the cover ratio of the engineered microsphere, modification
of the photonic nanojet is demonstrated. When the non-transparent cover is
introduced on the microsphere, the parasitic components of the incident beam are
filtered out and therefore the contribution of different components to the final
field are adjusted. At a wavelength of 633 nm, a sharp focal spot of
0.387 λ is achieved experimentally. To evaluate
this modulation effect, the contribution of the incident beam at different distance
from the optical axis to the photonic nanojet is analyzed. It is shown that at a
larger cover ratio, the NA of the engineered microsphere
is higher than that at a low cover ratio. This leads to a sharper focal spot and
shorter working distance of the photonic nanojet. The modulated photonic nanojet
with small beam size generated by a high cover ratio engineered microsphere is a
promising approach for applications of particle acceleration, optical
super-resolution imaging and optical lithography.
Methods
Sample fabrication
In this study, the microspheres at a diameter of
10 μm are commercially available from Bangs
Laboratories, Inc. The fabrication details of the gold membrane can be found in
our previous study20. To deposit Pt layer on the microsphere
surface, FEI DA 300 Focus Ion Beam (FIB) system is employed. Applying
30 KV and 50 nA of liquid metal Gallium ion sources,
around 1 μm thick Pt with different diameters are
fabricated on the top of microspheres. During the FIB fabrication, the center of
the mask pattern is aligned with the optical axis of the microsphere.
Characterization
To characterize the photonic nanojet generated by the engineered microsphere, we
design and build the experimental setup, which is schematically shown in Fig. 3a. A low power He-Ne 633 nm linear
polarized laser (MellesGriot, 25-LHP-925-230) is applied as the incident light
source. A half wave plate is applied to shape the linear polarization of the
beam and an attenuator is employed to tune the laser intensity to a desired
brightness. To manipulate the engineered microsphere in three dimensions, a thin
gold membrane is made and functions as a microsphere lens holder. The thickness
of the gold membrane is around 5 μm and it can be
observed that the hole matches the diameter of the microsphere. Thus, a strong
support is provided for FIB fabrication and optical microscope characterization.
During the characterization experiment, a single engineered microsphere is
placed under the illumination beam. The incident beam is assumed to propagate
along positive z axis and in parallel with the optical axis of the
engineered microsphere. To record the
x − y plane diffraction
pattern of the photonic nanojets, a high magnification objective lens (Olympus,
LMPlan Apo 150×, NA 0.9) and a high resolution CMOS camera (Nikon
digital SLR camera FX-format CMOS sensor,
4908 × 3264 pixel) are used.
Before the characterization, calibration of the pixel size of the CMOS camera
are performed. A structure which is inspected by SEM is used as a testing
sample. By calibrating the lengths in SEM and optical images, the size of each
pixel of the CMOS camera is obtained. The cross section of the photonic nanojet
is captured in the vicinity of the focal plane. For each cover ratio, three
engineered microspheres are fabricated. The final results are summarized based
on multiple times of experimental confirmation.
Additional Information
How to cite this article: Wu, M. et al. Super-focusing of
center-covered engineered microsphere. Sci. Rep.
6, 31637; doi: 10.1038/srep31637 (2016).